Winners, losers and a PM on the brink - what to expect in next week's elections
I promise this will not be a piece about whether or not the election results will give the Prime Minister his metaphorical P45. Not a huge amount has changed since I wrote about the level of doom last month. Unless you've been living on another planet, you'll have heard or read plenty of talk, and it's serious, about whether or not Labour MPs are going to move against the prime minister. It's grave enough for Starmer's allies to be getting their lines out early - striking a defiant tone, telling me this morning he'll "accept no deals, no pacts, no timetables, and will get on with being PM". "Keir is on the international stage focusing on ensuring that Trump doesn't wipe out the hard-fought progress the government has made on the cost of living crisis," they told me. "He isn't going to spend months talking to the membership when the country needs him to lead it. "
They gave this warning, specifically targeted at Angela Rayner: "Everyone knows that a leader with a public exit date has no power. It would be very surprising if a politician as accomplished as Angela didn't also realise that. Any deal would do more chaos in the country and the party plunged into eternal debate. " In seven days' time, will we be in the middle of a coup against Starmer? There's a six-word answer that suffices until this time next week - we might, but we don't know - although I might indulge you in some of the wildest suggestions a bit later on. Instead, let's look at what the benchmarks might be for all of the UK political parties who are being judged on Thursday, with a little nudge on where that could leave them in the aftermath - because, perish the thought, these elections are not all about No 10. Reform has been leading the UK-wide polls for more than a year now, consistently. Their popularity seems to have steadied since 2025 rather than zoomed up - but given their number-one position, they ought to, and should, do extremely well.
Some projections put them well over that, scooping up at least 1,500 out of the 5,000 or so that are being contested. But geography also matters.
Reform is highly likely to win the most seats in England, as they did in last year's elections.
But the party has been piling into Scotland and Wales too, and they want to make sure they are in either first or second place in both of those national elections.
Nigel Farage may have been around for a long time, but if voters put his party in that position next week, that's a major political moment. This time last year, the established parties had hoped that once Reform actually had the responsibility for running the local councils, they'd be somehow found out, and their appeal might fade. It doesn't look like voters will make that happen in this election. For the Greens, it's the first national test of whether Zack Polanski's exuberance and knack for grabbing headlines translates into actual power. He can be confident they'll add seats.
Meanwhile, the Lib Dems seem to love a local campaign more than any other party - not just because Sir Ed Davey loves being on the stump, but because the party's whole strategy has long been based on slow, careful targeting of areas where they reckon they might succeed, rather than concentrating on UK-wide momentum. One party source describes it as "tortoise and hare - maybe one day Ed will even dress up as a tortoise".
But again, it's not just the total, it's whether they build deeper defences in councils they already control, and whether they can win any new ones that matter, too. From time to time, there are rumblings in Lib Dem ranks, wondering aloud why the party doesn't seem to be the beneficiary of a restless electorate on the hunt for alternatives.
That would be something to boast about - but a demonstration of how odd politics is these days - that the party that's often not even third in the UK polls could have more local representatives than any other. For that to come to pass would mean a nasty night for Labour, and the Conservatives.
That means the last time these contests were run was before the mess of Boris Johnson's departure, and the calamity of Liz Truss.
"We didn't know if Kemi was going to last this time last year," one senior source says, "now we do. " Then there is Labour and the prime minister.
In England, whether it's migration, making ends meet, or disappointment with Starmer, the mood is generally very glum.
Labour is trying to hold on to about 2,500 council seats in England.
There is (cough) a range of opinion on whether Sir Keir Starmer should be pushed out afterwards. One minute, one minister says: "It's terminal," and another says "I just can't see a way through. " The next minute, another says: "I'm firmly of the view we must not doomscroll our way through leaders - we have to wean ourselves off it. "
Around the country, the party is already hacked off with the chatter around whether Starmer can survive, as one senior councillor tells me: "Every time you check your phones there is another intervention from Andy [Burnham] or some more speculation about Angela [Rayner].
But, shambles or not, going into next week, it is not clear if the PM of the day will keep his job.
Don't forget, too, the other parties who are trying to hold and take power in Holyrood and Cardiff.
Do send us any questions or points that you'd like us to ask at kuenssberg@bbc. uk - because the magic of elections, of course, means it's not our fate in politicians' hands, it's their fate in our hands. BBC InDepth is the home on the website and app for the best analysis, with fresh perspectives that challenge assumptions and deep reporting on the biggest issues of the day. Emma Barnett and John Simpson bring their pick of the most thought-provoking deep reads and analysis, every Saturday
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